11. A falling surplus tends to boost the dollar because it means Japanese exporters have fewer dollars to convert to yen. 12. A declining Japanese surplus often buoys the dollar because it means Japanese exporters have fewer dollars to sell for yen to bring profits home. 13. A declining trade surplus means Japanese exporters have fewer dollars to sell for yen to bring profits home. 14. A declining surplus often boosts the dollar because it means Japanese exporters have fewer dollars to sell for yen when they bring home earnings. 15. A narrowing deficit means foreign exporters will have fewer Australian dollars to sell for other currencies when bringing profits home. 16. A Japanese surplus often helps the yen because it means Japanese exporters have a wealth of dollars and other currencies to sell for yen to bring profits home. 17. A narrowing trade gap can draw investors to the U.S. currency because it means foreign exporters have fewer dollars to sell for home currencies when they bring profits home. 18. A shrinking Japanese surplus helps the dollar because it means Japanese exporters have fewer dollars to convert to yen when repatriating revenue. 19. A shrinking trade surplus means Japanese exporters have fewer dollars to convert to yen, thus weakening the Japanese currency. 20. A smaller surplus boosts the dollar by reducing the amount of dollars Japanese exporters have to sell for yen. |